This just in, via Bloomberg News,
UMDNJ has become one of the most graphic examples of mismanagement of an academic medical institution. The case is also one of the most striking examples of the "anechoic effect." I have never found any reference to the troubles at UMDNJ in any article in a scholarly medical or health care, policy, or services research journal.
New Jersey Senator Wayne Bryant, once one of the state's most powerful Democrats, was indicted today on corruption charges and accused of trading his political influence for a job at the state's medical university.
Bryant, 59, was charged in a 20-count indictment of engaging in a 'scheme and artifice to defraud the public of honest services.'
Bryant ... was accused by a federal monitor of directing millions of dollars to the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey after receiving a 'no-work' job there. R. Michael Gallagher, former dean at the medical university's school of osteopathic medicine, was also charged today in the indictment.
According to the indictment, Gallagher in 2003 gave Bryant the title of program support coordinator at the osteopathic school at a starting pay of $35,000 a year. The job helped Bryant accrue credit toward his state pension.
Bryant, according to the indictment, used his senate staff to arrange meetings for Gallagher with members of the Senate budget committee, at which Gallagher presented a 'white paper' regarding capital projects at the osteopathic school that needed funding. From 2003 to 2006, Bryant directed changes in the state budget to benefit the medical school, including an allocation of $2.325 million for the osteopathic school, the indictment said.
Failure to even talk about cases of bad or corrupt managment of health care institutions leaves us far from a solution to the problem.
1 comment:
Again my thanks to you for taking the effort to point out things that many or maybe most folks in academia feign ignorance about. Let's don't talk about it and maybe it will go away.
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